I’d jump at the chance to ride shotgun on Henry’s medicine wagon rolling from city to village hawking 'Stickin’ Salve' and 'Oil of Gladness'.
We’d ride into Elmira’s County Fair and set up over by the lake. I’d fix old Diamond a pail of oats and draw her a bucket of water. while great, great grandpa squeezed on his Union coat and arranged his potions on the shelves.
Henry’s voice would boom across the water like a megaphone and people would gather close - lured in by the old codger's hypnotic banter of miracle cures - and perilous Civil War battles.
He’d swear on his mother’s lumbago that 'Stickin’ Salve' works just as fine as the lead and powder he’d fired at Cedar Mountain.
The folks would shake with mirth whenever he bellowed, “I’m Henry Howard from Bunker Hill - Never worked and never will." Women would tug their husband's sleeves and they’d bring me pennies and dimes.
After dusk we’d tally the coins and latch down the wagon for the night then sleep side by side on the grass beneath the New England stars.
At sunrise I'd wipe his brow - to ease him gently back from the thunder of enemy shells still firing in his restless sleep.
We'd cook up some bacon and biscuits, hitch Diamond up to the wagon then head south through the rolling hills along the Tioga valley. We’d breathe in the fresh country air and tip our caps to the farmers.
If Henry would come to tap my shoulder some promising morning in spring and whisper "the wagon's hitched outside," I’d go in a Tioga minute.
*December, 2006
The story is fantasy but Henry was not. He was my great, great grandfather and fought for the Union in the Civil War and really did have a medicine wagon. My grandfather loved to tell stories about Henry. I am SOOO sorry I never met Henry which would have been really tough since he gave it up in 1899. I am sure he had a great line of bull and I am doing my best to carry on the family tradition.